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The Sharpe family were a working class family from Co. Durham, who had for a number of generations lived in the
parish of Redmarshall. In the 1820's, at the start of
the railway boom, John Sharpe, the eldest of three brothers,
started to work on the railways, initially as a navvy.
John worked his way up to be a foreman
on the Great Western and then later became a sub-contractor on
the same line. His two younger brothers followed suit, and soon John,
Robert and Paul were taking contracts on the Bristol and
Exeter, the Gloucester and Birmingham, the South Devon and the
South Wales. By the 1850's Robert and Paul were working in Cornwall.

In 1860 Robert Sharpe signed a more ambitious contract than
any of the brothers had hitherto attempted. Under the
company name Robert Sharpe & Sons, he and his two sons
Paul Wallace and William John made an agreement with the San
Paulo Railway Company to build the whole of the track from
Jundiahy to the port of Santos (via São Paulo) for the sum of
£1,745,000.
During the building of this line, they encountered
several problems. An existing bridge which the line was
intended to use was found to be insufficient, and they were
required to build a new bridge, of great magnitude and
difficult construction. Later the Cubatas River flooded
and washed away a different bridge which they had built to the
engineers plans, and they were required to rebuild a new
bridge, greater than before and more expensive.
Towards the completion of the work they encountered yet
more problems, this time on the stretch of line running up a
mountain called Serra. The original plans which the
engineer had made were scrapped, and new plans were drawn up
which required 4 million cubic yards of earth to be excavated
- double the original calculation.

Robert Sharpe & Sons
Railway
Contractors
1
Victoria Square, Westminster
The work was completed and handed over on 1st October 1866,
and was accepted by San Paulo Railway Company. Robert
Sharpe & Sons claimed that it was entitled to payment for
works carried out which were outside the scope of the
contract, but the company refused to pay.
Robert Sharpe died in 1868, but his sons continued to try
to reclaim the money in court, from both the Company, and from
the chief engineer James Brunlees. The 1873 court case
Sharpe v. San Paulo Railway Company is still quoted in modern
day contract law
Presumably Robert Sharpe & Sons sank into
insolvency. Paul Wallace continued to work as a civil
engineer until he died in 1908.
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